2014 to 2020 European Structural and Investment Funds Growth Programme

Call for Proposals European Regional Development Fund

Priority Axis 7: Sustainable Transport in and the

Managing Authority: Department for Communities and Local Government Fund: European Regional Development Fund

Priority Axis: Priority Axis 7: Sustainable Transport in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly

Call Reference: OC05R15P 0121

Local Enterprise Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly Partnership Area:

th Call Open: 27 March 2015

th Call Closes: 30 June 2015

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Contents

1. Call Context 1.1 Strategic Context 1.2 Scope of Activity 1.2.1 Investment Priority 7a

1.2.2 Investment Priority 7c 2. Call Requirements 3. Required Deliverables 4. General Information 4.1 Compliance and Eligibility 4.2 Intervention Rate & Match Funding 4.3 Applicants 4.4 Cross Cutting Themes/Horizontal Principles 4.5 State Aid & Revenue Generation 4.6 Funding Agreement 4.7 Procurement 5. Application Process & Prioritisation Methodology 6. Support 7. Key Documents 8. Document Checklist 9. Document Submission 10. Timescales 11. Formal Agreement of the European Regional Development Fund Operational Programme

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1. Call Context

The 2014 to 2020 European Structural and Investment Funds bring the European Regional Development Fund, European Social Fund and part of the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development together into a single European Union Structural and Investment Funds Growth Programme for England supporting the key growth priorities of innovation, research and development, support for Small and Medium sized Enterprises, low carbon, skills, employment, and social inclusion. The Funds are managed by the Department for Communities and Local Government for European Regional Development Fund, Department for Work and Pensions for European Social Fund and the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs for European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development. In London, the Greater London Authority acts as an Intermediate Body for the European Regional Development Fund and European Social Fund programmes. Unless stated otherwise, the term “Managing Authority” will apply to all these organisations. The Managing Authorities work closely with local partners who provide;  Practical advice and information to the Managing Authorities to assist in the preparation of local plans that contribute towards Operational Programme priorities and targets;  Local intelligence to the Managing Authorities in the development of project calls (decided by the Managing Authorities) that reflect Operational Programme and local development needs as well as match funding opportunities; and  Advice on local economic growth conditions and opportunities within the context of Operational Programmes and the local European Structural and Investment Funds Strategy to aid the Managing Authorities’ assessments at outline and full application stage. This call is issued by the Department for Communities and Local Government and invites outline applications in respect of the European Regional Development Fund. European Regional Development Fund is specifically focussed on investment to support economic growth and job creation. The call invites proposals in respect of Priority Axis 7 of the European Regional Development Fund Operational Programme: “Sustainable Transport” against the requirements set out in this call document. 1.1. Strategic Context The and the Isles of Scilly is hampered by a range of transport development needs. By virtue of its peripherality and physical distance to markets, business growth is slowed by high transport costs and slower movement of goods and services which in turn impacts on the areas’ attractiveness to new business and inward investment. It is in particular adversely impacted by poor transport links to the core corridors of the Trans-European Transport Network. These restrict trade

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opportunities as well as hamper travel for visitors to Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly, which constrains growth of the tourist sector. This is partly why the Atlantic Action Plan, which covers Cornwall, includes as a priority the need to improve connectivity and accessibility for peripheral areas, including their links with inland areas.

The importance of good connectivity and sustainable forms of transport to aid economic development and growth has been recognised in the United Kingdom’s Trans-European Transport Network map, approved by the Commission, which includes the A30 as part of its comprehensive road network. The A30 is the main trunk road connecting Cornwall with the rest of England but remaining sections of single carriageway along parts of it constrains capacity, resulting in severe congestion and delays which impact on the local economy and limit opportunities for growth. The planned improvement scheme would increase capacity of this link, improve journey reliability (including in relation to resilience) and unlock productivity increases.

Travel by rail into and within Cornwall has expanded over the past two decades. There is however only one main train line through Cornwall with five branch lines from it serving , , , Falmouth and St Ives. The main line from London to provides an important strategic link to the rest of the United Kingdom and is part of the Comprehensive Trans-European Transport Rail Network. However, current signal block lengths, which ensure sufficient space between trains to avoid collisions, limit the capacity to operate more frequent trains. Infrastructure improvements would enable a greater frequency of services (that is, more long distance services from Cornwall to London and other economic centres in the United Kingdom) and reduce rail travel time to London.

Support from the European Regional Development Fund will enable parts of the comprehensive network to be developed in order to increase frequency of rail services, reduce road congestion, speed up travel times and increase passenger numbers travelling on or through them, in line with the Local Transport Plan: Connecting Cornwall 2011-2030.

For the A30, the objective is to remove a strategic bottleneck in the Trans-European Transport comprehensive road network. For the signalling project, the objective is to enable greater service frequency on the mainline railway.

The Operational Programme identifies two Investment Priorities which will strengthen sustainable transport in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly:  Investment Priority 7a – Supporting a multimodal Single European Transport Area by investing in the Trans-European Transport Network; and  Investment Priority 7c - Developing and improving environmentally-friendly (including low-noise) and low-carbon transport systems, including inland waterways and maritime transport, ports, multimodal links and airport infrastructure, in order to promote sustainable regional and local mobility. Investment Priority 7a Specific Objective: Improve the accessibility of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly by enhancing integration with the Trans-European Transport road and rail network.

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Investment Priority 7c Specific Objective: Improve accessibility and connectivity within Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly through developing sustainable means of transport.

1.2 Scope of Activity This call responds to the needs as defined in the European Regional Development Fund England Operational Programme under Priority Axis 7, Investment Priorities 7a and 7c. 1.2.1 Investment Priority 7a - Supporting a multimodal Single European Transport Area by investing in the Trans-European Transport Network. Specific Objective: Improve the accessibility of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly by enhancing integration with the Trans-European Transport road and rail network. Indicative actions to be supported by the European Regional Development Fund may include:  Targeted investment in the Comprehensive Trans-European Transport road network, namely enhancements to the A30 to alleviate congestion at a key bottleneck between Carland and . The first stage of investment will be to review the design and development options for the construction of the road infrastructure. This initial design and development work will form part of this call with the final scheme application to follow as part of a later call. This key bottleneck constrains capacity for a 12.5km stretch in the central road corridor of the Less Developed Region. Investment to remove this bottleneck will enable economic growth and investment in expanding areas and key towns maximising the impact of existing and future European Union investments and increasing productivity through improving journey times and through supporting sustained business growth across Cornwall and on the Isles of Scilly. The road investment will equally support job creation and labour mobility for a number of key towns that adjoin this stretch of road; and

 Targeted investment in the Comprehensive Trans-European Transport rail network, namely improvements to signalling infrastructure on the mainline.

These investments in strategic transport infrastructure will be complemented by investments under investment priority 7c that foster environmentally-friendly and low- carbon transport and catalyse more sustainable and multi-modal transport for users of the A30 and the main railway line as well as a shift to more sustainable modes of transport such as public transport, rail services and cycling.

Local Context: Transport schemes can play an important role in promoting economic development and are necessary to complement other growth investments (past and future). The specific investments in transport under this investment priority will need to demonstrate that they are addressing significant and evidenced bottlenecks, for example for business, commuter and holiday traffic. The local impact should be a

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major feature of any successful investment, but there will also need to be a demonstration of how access to and from the rest of the United Kingdom will be enhanced.

There is an expectation that investment will leverage additional private sector investments, whether directly or indirectly through helping attract inward investment into the area because of its improved connectivity. Any public support under this programme must demonstrate compliance with appropriate environmental legislative requirements, including environmental impact assessments where needed.

1.2.2 Investment Priority 7c - Developing and improving environmentally-friendly (including low-noise) and low-carbon transport systems, including inland waterways and maritime transport, ports, multimodal links and airport infrastructure, in order to promote sustainable regional and local mobility. Specific Objective: Improve accessibility and connectivity within Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly through developing sustainable means of transport. As England’s only Less Developed territory, the economy of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly is hampered by a range of transport development needs. Planned improvements in connectivity supported under Specific Objective 1 of this priority axis should be complemented with investments in environmentally-friendly and low carbon sustainable transport encouraging a shift towards sustainable modes of transport. These investments will additionally help to address barriers to economic growth and the movement of goods and people (labour mobility, access to jobs and an over-reliance on cars with high fuel costs).

Support within this investment priority will complement investment under Specific Objective 1 of this priority axis to promote sustainable transport, encourage modal shift to lower carbon forms of transport and complement and support larger strategic transport infrastructure investments complementing the national Department for Transport strategy Creating Growth, Cutting Carbon. It will, in particular, improve access to stations on the London to Penzance rail line, thereby increasing the impact of the investment in the signalling improvements, encourage the use of low emission vehicles through provision of alternative fuel infrastructure and increase labour mobility through green infrastructure to improve links with transport hubs and existing and future employment sites.

There is strong evidence of market failure in relation to alternative fuels infrastructure, with the national electric vehicles network only reaching services which is over 90 miles from , the administrative centre of Cornwall. Its peripheral and rural location means that Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly risk being cut off from national networks. This is the main driver behind the investment in this area, coupled with the wider environmental benefits. Investment will involve developing an alternative fuelling network that can bring other technologies to market with the associated economic and environmental benefits. It will also investigate the possibilities associated with decarbonising public transport.

All of the above will be wrapped into a ‘green corridor’ approach that will allow for integrated investment in transport across Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly that will

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support and complement the investments that are being made in the road infrastructure. Focussing on this integrated approach is particularly important in a rural and dispersed population area like Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly with a low wage profile and high personal transportation costs. Investments in alternative fuel infrastructure that permit connectivity to the main arterial routes through Cornwall will encourage labour mobility. Equally, investment in alternative fuel infrastructure on the Isles of Scilly will encourage take up of low emission vehicles.

Under this investment priority, indicative actions to be supported by European Regional Development Fund will be:

 St Erth multi modal hub – investment to enable access to train and public transport services to promote a shift from private car to low carbon modes;

 Improvements for multi-modal travel and integrated mobility services, in particular connecting to the A30 and the railway network and current and future employment sites (; Bike and Ride, cycling infrastructure at and cycle ways to train stations etc.); and

 Alternative Fuels infrastructure – investment to increase the number of alternative fuel re-fuelling points across the Cornwall connecting to the A30 and other key transport routes and on the Isles of Scilly to encourage take-up of low emission vehicles across the region.

Local context: Investments under this Specific Objective shall primarily complement investments into the A30 and the main railway line under Specific Objective 1 of this priority axis, while fostering environmentally-friendly and low-carbon transport. Supported operations shall contribute to low-carbon road transport (use of alternative fuels) as well as a shift to more sustainable modes of transport such as public transport, rail services and cycling. Particular focus shall be placed on investments that catalyse more sustainable and multi-modal transport for users of the A30 and the main railway line.

Proposals should also consider and demonstrate how they are supporting and improving access to and use of sustainable forms of transport, in particular given the emphasis expected on linking people to jobs. They should also consider the potential effects of transport interventions on carbon emissions in their local using the United Kingdom Department for Transport basic carbon tool. A clear emphasis for this Investment Priority will be on sustainable transport.

2. Call Requirements

 An indicative budget of £25 million has been allocated to this call. This is intended as a guide and may be reviewed;  All applications are competitive. Proposals can only contain activities which are eligible for European Regional Development Fund;

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 Proposals should be for a minimum of £500,000 European Regional Development Fund;  Applicants will need to have eligible match funding for the balance of costs which must be from a source other than the European Union;  Projects should be capable of providing coverage of the whole of the Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly Local Enterprise Partnership area;  All procurement must demonstrate compliance with European Union regulations;  Applicants must demonstrate compliance with State Aid law; and  All expenditure and activities will be subject to rigorous audit and non- compliance may lead to financial penalty. European Regional Development Fund cannot be used to duplicate existing activities or activities that do not address market failure. European Regional Development Fund can only be used to achieve additional activity or bring forward activity more quickly. Applicants must be able to demonstrate that what they are proposing is additional to what would have occurred anyway or enables activity to be brought forward and delivered quicker than otherwise would be the case. The proposed project must not duplicate or undermine existing business support services operating nationally or locally. 3. Required Deliverables

Operations will be expected to achieve the relevant outputs set down below, the definitions of which can be accessed at the European Regional Development Fund Operational Programme.

ID Indicator Total length of reconstructed or upgraded roads of which: Trans-European C14 Transport Network

P7 Length of railway with new or enhanced signalling installation

P8 Alternative fuel charging/re-fuelling points

P9 improved multi-modal connection points

P10 Number of multi-modal transport hubs

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Applicants will need to be able to demonstrate how they will achieve the deliverables committed to within their proposal along with any methodology used to record it. Applicants will also need to ensure robust systems are in place, and be able to describe, capture and record targets. All operations will be required to collect data and report progress against the deliverables with each claim. Where an operation underperforms against their deliverables, they may be subject to a performance penalty. There must be a fully evidenced audit trail for all contracted deliverables.

4. General Information

Essential information to support the drafting of an application and delivery of a successful European Regional Development Fund funded project is available at the European Growth Funding website pages. 4.1 Compliance and Eligibility When developing an application, Applicants should refer to guidance on eligible Applicants, activities and costs. These are for guidance only and Applicants should take their own specialist advice if in doubt. It is the responsibility of the Applicant to ensure that the rules and guidance are adhered to both at application stage and following approval. European Structural and Investment Funds are governed by European regulations and national rules. Applicants are advised to familiarise themselves with the relevant documentation listed in the ‘key documents’ section prior to submitting an outline application. If successful, Applicants will enter into the standard Funding Agreement and must abide by the standard terms and conditions contained therein. Applicants are therefore strongly advised to read these terms and conditions to ensure that they would be able to enter into such an agreement prior to responding to the call. Once a Funding Agreement has been issued it should be signed and returned within a short timescale. 4.2 Intervention Rate & Match Funding European Regional Development Fund is the funding which is used where no other funding can be obtained (the funder of last resort). The maximum European Regional Development Fund contribution rate for the operation is 80%. This means European Regional Development Fund can contribute up to 80% of the total eligible project costs subject to State Aid regulations. The level of European Regional Development Fund awarded will be the minimum in order for the project to proceed. The remaining 20% or more must come from other eligible sources. European Regional Development Fund is not paid in advance and expenditure must be defrayed prior to the submission of any claims. Applicants may be asked to demonstrate how they are able to cash flow the operation. 4.3 Applicants

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Applicants must be legally constituted at the point of signing a Funding Agreement, and be able to enter into a legally binding Funding Agreement. The Applicant will be the organisation that, if the application is successful, enters into a contract for European Regional Development Fund and therefore carries the liability for ensuring that the terms of the European Regional Development Fund Funding Agreement are met by them and to all delivery partners. If there is more than one organisation applying for the funds, a lead organisation must be selected to become the Applicant. It is this organisation that carries the responsibility and liability for carrying out a compliant project. The Managing Authority will consider the Applicant’s track record, both positive and negative. If the Applicant has been involved in the delivery of previous European grants and any irregularities with this (these) grant(s) have been identified, the Managing Authority will look into these and expect to see how and what steps have been taken to ensure that these have been addressed to mitigate the risk of further irregularities in the future. It is acknowledged that some organisations will be new to European Structural and Investment Funds funding and will not have a track record. 4.4 Cross Cutting Themes/Horizontal Principles All applications received under this call should demonstrate how the Cross Cutting Themes have been addressed in the project design and development. Cross cutting themes for European Regional Development Fund are ‘equality and anti- discrimination’ and ‘sustainable development’. Further information is available in the European Regional Development Fund Operational Programme. 4.5 State Aid & Revenue Generation Applicants are required, in the Outline Application, to provide a view on how their proposal complies with State Aid law. Applicants must ensure that projects comply with the law on State Aid.1 Grant funding to any economic undertaking which is state aid can only be awarded if it is compatible aid, in that it complies with the terms of a notified scheme or is covered by the De Minimis Regulation. Guidance for grant recipients, explaining more about State Aid, is available; it is important that Applicants take responsibility for understanding the importance of the State Aid rules and securing their full compliance with them throughout the project, if it is selected into the Programme. The Managing Authority is not able to give legal advice on State Aid. It is the responsibility of the Applicant to ensure that the operation is State Aid compliant.

1 Article 107(1) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union provides that: “Save as otherwise provided in the Treaties, any aid granted by a Member State or through state resources in any form whatsoever which distorts or threatens to distort competition by favouring certain undertakings or the production of certain goods shall, in so far as it affects trade between Member States, be incompatible with the internal market.”

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Where the Applicant does not perceive that there is any State Aid, it should state whether or not it considers Articles 61 and 65(8) of regulation 1303/2013 to apply. This revenue should be taken into account in calculating eligible expenditure. Article 61 refers to monitoring revenues generated after completion of the project, and Article 65(8) how to deal with differences in the forecast and actual revenues at the end of the operation. The details of this will be tested at the full application stage. 4.6 Funding Agreement The Funding Agreement is a standard, non-negotiable and legally binding document. Any successful Applicant will be subject to the terms and conditions contained within this agreement. Applicants are strongly advised to seek their own advice to ensure that they would be able to enter into and abide by the terms of the Funding Agreement. Failure to meet any of the conditions of the agreement or the commitments within the application will result in claw back of funding. Applicants should be aware that additional provisions and securities may be included within the Funding Agreement to protect the investment. These will be further discussed if relevant following the Full Application stage. 4.7 Procurement All costs delivered by the Grant Recipient (the Applicant) and/or delivery partners must be delivered on an actual cost basis. Other costs must be procured in line with European Union regulations. The most common error identified during audit has been failure to comply with relevant procurement regulations and crucially to maintain a full audit trail to prove that they have complied with the relevant regulation. Robust and transparent procurement is required to ensure that Grant Recipients:  Consider value for money;  Maximise efficient use of public money; and  Maintain competitiveness and fairness across the European Union. It is recommended that Applicants seek their own legal advice pertaining to their procurement and requirements to publicise any tendering opportunities. The Managing Authority is not able to give legal advice on procurement. It is the responsibility of the Applicant to ensure the project is compliant in this respect. 5. Application Process & Prioritisation Methodology

There are two stages to the European Regional Development Fund application process; Outline Application and if successful, Full Application. Applicants must fully complete the Outline Application via LOGASnet (section 9 refers). Guidance is available on the European Growth Funding website pages. Applications will be

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subject to a Gateway Assessment undertaken by the Managing Authority under the following criteria:  Applicant eligibility;  Activity and expenditure eligibility; and

 The fit with the European Regional Development Fund OP and the call. Proposals that pass the Gateway Assessment will move into the Core Assessment which consists of the following:  Strategic fit;  Value for money;  Management & control;  Deliverability;  Procurement / tendering; and  State Aid compliance. The Managing Authority will seek advice from partners when considering applications to ensure its assessment is informed by local economic growth conditions and opportunities within the context of Operational Programmes and the local European Structural and Investment Funds Strategy. This will include the relevant Local Enterprise Partnership Area European Structural and Investment Funds Committee and other partners deemed relevant to the application. The assessment and any prioritisation will be undertaken using only the information supplied as part of the application process. The Managing Authority cannot accept further detail outside this process. Non-public sector Applicants who are successful at the Outline Application stage may be subject to due financial diligence checks by the Managing Authority, prior to submission of a Full Application. Applicants will be required to submit accounts, and to clarify financial or other organisational information. New Applicant organisations may be required to provide details of a guarantor. 6. Support

Please note that this is a competitive call and to preserve impartiality we are unable to enter into correspondence with applicants over their Outline application. Details of where guidance can be found are contained throughout this calls document. In exceptional circumstances, if there are issues with accessing this guidance, please contact: [email protected] 7. Key Documents

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 Outline Application Form;  Outline Application Form Guidance;  Local Enterprise Partnership area’s European Structural and Investment Funds Strategy;  Eligibility Guidance; and  Target Definitions.

8. Document Checklist Failure to provide the following documentation will result in the application being rejected Outline Stage:  Fully completed Outline Application;  Financial Tables;  Outputs, Results and Indicators Tables; and  Three years financial accounts (if private or voluntary and community sector). 9. Document Submission

Completed Outline Applications must be submitted via the LOGASnet system. Please note that Applicants will require a user ID and password in order to access the LOGASnet system. Details on how to register on the system can be found on the GOV.UK website European Growth Funding website pages. Please allow up to 10 days to receive your login details. 10. Timescales

Launch of Call advertised on gov.uk. 27th March 2015

Deadline for submission of Outline Application 30th June 2015

Outline Application forms not received by the deadline will not be assessed. Outline Applications which are not fully completed will be excluded. For this call applications will normally be required to commence delivery/activity within three months of the award of contract.

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Any changes related to the deadline for the submission of the Outline Application form will be notified on the European Growth Funding website pages. 11. Formal Agreement of the European Regional Development Fund Operational Programme

The information and references in the call are based on the latest version of the European Regional Development Fund Operational Programme and are correct at the time of publishing. The Operational Programme may be subject to further amendment during its final negotiations with the European Commission, and subsequent calls will reflect any changes, to the extent that they may affect the terms of calls, that are made. In relation to the present call, the Managing Authority will take the possibility of relevant changes to the Programme into account when assessing outline and full applications, and where such changes occur will notify Applicants of any issues that arise, and propose a method of dealing with them.

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